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49 Sentences With "becoming smooth"

How to use becoming smooth in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "becoming smooth" and check conjugation/comparative form for "becoming smooth". Mastering all the usages of "becoming smooth" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The texture of life, the tactile experience, is becoming smooth glass.
The morning is cool on the outside and hot in the restaurant, the war in the words playful as a war can be, meaning each gut bleeds out like a slit pig's, filling the cracks in linoleum, spilling over, becoming smooth.
Sculpture gradually disappearing and becoming smooth towards body whorl excepting irregular growth lines, but remaining faintly at base. Sutural ramp moderately rugose. Umbilicus circular, narrow and deep. Nacreous part of parietal wall widely extended beyond umbilicus by secondary resorption.
Branchlets with white hairs, becoming smooth with age. The leaf stalks 2 to 3 mm long, silky hairs only on young leaves. Only the midrib is prominent on both surfaces, lateral veins obscure, raised above but sunken below. There is no intramarginal vein.
Up to 60 follicles develop on the globular spikes. The follicles are finely furred at first before becoming smooth and golden brown in colour, measuring long, high, and wide. The follicles are flat with pronounced 'shoulders', giving a rectangular appearance in cross section. Specimens of var.
Hakea nodosa is an erect, sprawling shrub usually growing to tall and a similar width. The branchlets quickly form ribbing or slowly becoming smooth. The leaves are usually needle-shaped, sometimes flattened, flexible, long and wide. The leaves are occasionally grooved below and smooth ending in a point long.
The finely textured velvety branches are initially white to pale green, becoming smooth and red- brown with maturity. The small solitary three-scaled buds are dark brown. The simple leaves of this broadleaf evergreen are alternately arranged on branches. Each leaf is held by a twisted leaf stalk, vertically.
Hakea stenophylla is a spreading shrub or tree typically growing to high with more or less smooth, dark bark. The branchlets are thickly covered with flattened, soft white hairs, occasionally rusty coloured. The surface quickly becoming smooth. The grey-green leaves are linear to narrowly egg-shaped long and wide.
Hakea decurrens is a semi-prostrate to erect scrambling bush or small tree tall. Smaller branches have short densely matted silky hairs, occasionally some quickly becoming smooth. Leaves are needle-shaped, widely spreading horizontally are long and wide. The smooth leaves are grooved on the underside ending with a sharp point long.
The sandpaper oak can be a small tree of up to 40 feet (12 meters) high or a large shrub that forms thickets. The bark is light brown and papery. The twigs are gray, with short velvety hairs, becoming smooth with age. The buds are dark red-brown, sparsely covered with hairs.
The structure of a fractal object is reiterated in its magnifications. Fractals can be magnified indefinitely without losing their structure and becoming "smooth"; they have infinite perimeters—some with infinite, and others with finite surface areas. One such fractal curve with an infinite perimeter and finite surface area is the Koch snowflake.
Stiff needle-like leaves vary in length between long and wide with sparse flat hairs but quickly becoming smooth ending with a small point. Flowers from August to October followed by oval shaped fruit with small blunt wart-like protuberances long and wide with a short broad beak with obscure or no horns.
Hakea brownii is a lignotuberous shrub growing to high. Smaller branches and new leaves are densely covered in matted rusty coloured silky hairs, becoming smooth by flowering. The leaves are ornamental, fan shaped, stiff, thickly textured and prickly toothed at the apex. They have straight sides tapering to the base, long and wide.
Acacia cockertoniana is a tree belonging to the genus Acacia and the subgenus Juliflorae. It is native to the Mid West and Goldfields-Esperance regions of Western Australia. The tree typically grows to a height of with rough grey bark on a deeply fissured trunk and stems becoming smooth on upper branches.
Hakea ivoryi is shrub or small tree typically grows to a height of with white flat silky hairs becoming smooth along branchlets and forms a lignotuber. It has simple needle-like leaves long with silky hairs becoming hairless with age. Young trees often have highly divided segmented leaves. The bark is brown, rough and corky.
The Mohr oak can be a small tree up to six meters (20 feet) high or a large thicket-forming shrub. The bark is light brown, rough and deeply furrowed. The twigs are yellowish or whitish, with short velvety hairs, becoming smooth with age. The buds are dark red-brown, sparsely covered with hairs.
The pedicels are long, slight to densely covered with long white hairs. The smooth perianth is long and the pistil long. The needle-shaped leaves are grooved on the undersurface and up to long and wide and ending in a sharp point long. The leaves are moderately covered with flattened silky hairs, quickly becoming smooth.
Hakea macrorrhyncha is an erect shrub or small tree, single-stemmed or forked close to the ground high. Branchlets are densely covered with short soft matted hairs and remain until flowering. Needle like leaves are often grooved below long and wide. Appearing white initially and densely covered with matted hairs becoming smooth without hairs.
Umbels compound, devoid of involucral bracts, rays 5-9, bracteoles 4-5, pedicels 4-9, flowers white or yellow, petals circa 1.5mm. Mericarps broadly ovate to oblong, flat, up to 5 x 3mm, tuberculate when young but becoming smooth at maturity, lateral ribs winged. Flowering August–September and fruiting September–October.Schultes, Richard Evans; Albert Hofmann (1979).
Hakea standleyensis is a multi-stemmed sparse shrub tall and up to wide. Smaller branches and young leaves have dense silky hairs quickly becoming smooth. Needle-like leaves often curved are crowded at the base long and wide. The inflorescence consists of 6–12 white flowers with over-lapping bracts surrounding each flower long on a short stalk.
Xanthosia atkinsoniana is an erect, perennial herb growing to 60 cm high. It is sparsely hairy, becoming smooth with age. The flowering stems are almost leafless. The leaves (on a petiole of length 2–12 cm) mostly occur at the base of the plant, with the leaf-blade being 2–4 cm by 1.5–4 cm.
Indumentum was present on the leaf surface of the Australian and Indonesian samples, and absent in material from Papua New Guinea. Pouteria obovata grows as a bushy- crowned tree reaching a maximum height of . The leaves hairy when young, with upper surfaces becoming smooth and shiny. They are roughly oval- to spear- shaped and measure long, and wide.
The pale green leaves are smooth, occasionally bluish-green with a powdery film. Young leaves are darker with sparse flattened silky white and rusty coloured hairs quickly becoming smooth. The inflorescence consists of a single umbel of 16-28 white to pale yellow flowers on a short stalk long. The young flower bracts long and slightly hairy externally.
Isopogon trilobus grows as a shrub anywhere from in height. The new stems are pale to reddish brown, and initially covered with small fine hairs before becoming smooth. Its leaves are highly variable and have anywhere from three to nine small to deep lobes. The barrel-shaped yellow inflorescences appear from September to January and are terminal (occurring on the ends of stems).
Lanmaoa fragrans is a rare species of bolete fungus in the family Boletaceae found in Europe. It has a brownish convex cap measuring in diameter that initially has a velvety texture before becoming smooth. The spindle-shaped stipe measures long by wide. It is yellow at the top and flushed with red in the lower portions, terminating with black at the very base.
Hakea divaricata is lignotuberous upright shrub or tree typically growing to high with a dark coloured corky furrowed trunk. Smaller branches are red and smooth, on occasion sparsely or densely covered in soft short hairs. The prickly compound leaves are rigid, arranged alternately and are long and wide ending a sharp point. They are thinly covered with soft hairs quickly becoming smooth.
The leaves are initially thickly covered with flattened, rusty coloured, smooth soft hairs quickly becoming smooth. The leaves taper abruptly to a short pointed hook at the apex. The inflorescence consists of 10 to 16 cream-white, sweetly scented flowers on a peduncle long that is densely covered with white, soft hairs. The individual flowers are on a stem long.
Quercus welshii has an elaborate root system that helps stabilize soils in sandy desert scrub communities. Elliptical or lance-shaped leaves with 6-10 lobes along the margins, with pointed tips, sometimes with lobes and teeth. Leaves are up to long with dense hairs on both sides, becoming smooth with age. Quercus welshii is well anchored in sandy soils by complex root systems.
Ficus coronulata is a tree growing up to tall. It is dioecious. Its twigs hang down, are from in diameter, and have glassy hairs lying close to the twig (appressed), with the twigs becoming smooth with age. The leaf stem is long and in diameter, and is rough to the touch (or with scattered ascending glassy hairs), and deeply channelled on the upper surface.
Hakea purpurea is a dense, upright, slightly spreading shrub high and wide. The branchlets are either smooth or with flattened, silky hairs. The leaves are needle-shaped and divide toward the apex into 2-7 segments that are long and wide and end in a sharp point long. The leaves are thickly covered in short, matted, white or rusty coloured hairs quickly becoming smooth.
Hakea pachyphylla is a non lignotuberous compact to spreading single stemmed shrub growing to high. The inflorescence consists of 1-7 yellow flowers that appear in axillary clusters in spring. The white main stalk is long covered with densely covered with short matted hairs. Small branches are ribbed and densely covered with soft mid-red matted hairs quickly becoming smooth or on occasion remain until flowering.
It has mid-grey to light grey coloured bark that is finely longitudinally fissured alongh the trunks and main branches becoming smooth of smaller branches. The green to grey-green phyllodes sometimes have a yellowish tinge. The phyllodes are long and linear with a length of and a width of . They are also straight to very shallowly incurved with numerous parallel longitudinal fine nerves.
Hakea varia is an erect or spreading shrub typically growing to a height of and wide and forms a lignotuber.The branchlets and young leaves have flattened, densely matted silky hairs, quickly becoming smooth. The stiff leaves may be variable on the one plant, needle-shaped, simple, more or less elliptic, egg-shaped, toothed, long and wide. All variations of leaves always end in a sharp point long.
Hakea baxteri is a non lignotuberous tall upright shrub with smooth grey bark. Smaller branches and young leaves have densely matted soft rusty coloured hairs becoming smooth when flowering. The dark green rigid leaves are long and wide, fan shaped with a toothed upper margin narrowing at the base. The inflorescence consists of 4-8 small strongly scented flowers, light red with a green style.
Leaves are alternate, flat and linear, sometimes needle-shaped ending in a hard blunt point. Length may be variable from long and wide more or less the same length the entire leaf. Young leaves covered in soft matted hairs becoming smooth with age. Large "S" shaped fruit are smooth long and wide aging to rough and pitted on the surface ending with an incurving beak.
Hakea bucculenta is non- lignotuberous upright, rounded, bushy shrub that typically grows to a height of but can reach as high as . Smaller branches have irregular patches of flattened silky hairs becoming smooth at flowering. The leaves are a narrowly linear shape with a slight curve and long and wide. Each leaf has fine ribbing, conspicuous veins with an obvious mid-vein on both sides and ending with a sharp point.
Alocolytoceratinae is a subfamily of lytoceratids that comprises genera characterized by many deep constrictions in the shell resulting in capricorn- like (goat's horm) ornamention, especially in the middle whorls, but becoming smooth and more involute in the outer whorls. Saddle endings in the suture tend to be phylloid, (leaf-like). Alcolytocerainae includes Alocolytoceras, Lobolytoceras, Pachylytocras, and Pleurolytoceras, which are mostly from the Toarcian. One genus, Pachylotoceras, extends into the lower Bajocian.
The leaves are often retained dead on the tree into winter. Both sides of the leaf are initially downy with the upper surface becoming smooth. The flowers are produced in May; the male flowers are pendulous catkins. The female flowers are sessile, growing near the tips of new shoots, producing acorns 1.2–2.3 cm long and 1.2–1.5 cm broad, in broad, bushy-scaled cups; the acorns mature in September to October.
Hoplitoides is an ammonite from the Upper Cretaceous, Turonian belonging to the Coilopoceratidae, a family in the Acanthoceratoidea. Hoplitoides have early whorls which are grooved, then flat, and finally narrowly rounded venters; early stages with umbilical tubercles and space ribs, later stages becoming smooth. The suture is similar to that of Coilopoceras but less extreme. Hoplitoides has an established distribution which is widespread, from western North America, northwestern Africa and northern South America.
Hakea tuberculata is an upright, slender and columnar shrub typically growing to high with ascending branches. The branchlets are thickly covered in coarse, stiff, rusty or white hairs. The stiff leaves are narrowly egg-shaped or elliptic, long and wide with 3-8 lobes or teeth toward the apex. The leaves are moderately or faintly covered in flattened, dense, silky, rusty coloured hairs quickly becoming smooth and ending in a very sharp point long.
KHMX signed on HD Radio operations in 2006. 96.5 HD2 first carried a rhythmic contemporary - dance music format, known as "Energy 96.5." Energy 96.5 was the moniker KHMX used prior to becoming "Mix" in 1990. After the sale of the station to CBS in April 2009, KHMX 96.5 HD2 and KKHH 95.7 HD2 swapped formats, with KHMX-HD2 becoming smooth jazz "The Wave", while KKHH-HD2 taking on the dance format and "Energy 95.7" moniker.
Illustration of Bovista plumbea from James Sowerby's 1797 work Coloured figures of English fungi or mushrooms The genus was originally described by mycologist Christiaan Hendrik Persoon in 1794. He described the genus as "Cortice exteriore libero evanefcente, pileo acauli demum glaberrimo, vertice irregulariter rupto" ("Exterior cortex vanishes, cap stemless becoming smooth, irregularly breaking the top"). Synonyms include Piesmycus (Rafinesque 1808), Piemycus (Rafinesque 1813), Sackea (Rostkovius 1844), Globaria (Quélet 1873), and Pseudolycoperdon (Velenovský 1947). Bovista plumbea is the type species.
The fruit bodies of Metuloidea murashkinskyi are somewhat cap- like but adhere firmly to the substrate without a stipe, and measure by by 1–5 mm thick. They have a leathery texture when fresh, but become fragile when dry. The cap surface is initially tomentose, later becoming smooth and zonate with an uneven surface and a cinnamon-brown colour. The spore-bearing surface, or hymenium, is hydnoid—that is, bearing structures resembling small conical spines measuring 0.5–5 mm long.
The compact cap can reach an impressive in diameter. At first it is hemispherical with an inrolled margin, but becomes convex at maturity as the fruit body expands, while in older specimens the margin might be slightly undulating. When young, the pileus is greyish white to silvery-white or buff, but older specimens tend to develop olivaceous, ochraceous or brownish tinges. The surface of the cap is finely tomentose, becoming smooth at maturity and is often slightly viscid in wet weather.
Covered with fine fur but becoming smooth with age, the oval- shaped follicles measure long by 0.2–0.7 cm high (0.1–0.3 in) and wide. The bare swollen spike, now known as an infructescence, is patterned with short spiky persistent bracts on its surface where follicles have not developed. Each follicle contains one or two obovate dark grey-brown to black seeds sandwiching a woody separator. Measuring long, they are made up of an oblong to semi-elliptic smooth or slightly ridged seed body, long by wide.
Global confirms Heart expansion details, Radio Today, 14 April 2014 The two stations based in Wrexham – Heart North West and Wales and Heart Cymru – became part of the Capital FM Network on the same date. On 20 November 2017, CN Group announced The Bay would be sold to Global along with sister station Lakeland Radio – the sale was finalised by 1 December 2017.The Bay Radio Sold To Global Entertainment Group, The Bay, 20 November 2017 The Bay was rebranded as Heart, with Lakeland Radio becoming Smooth on 4 March 2018.
140px The tree was deemed to have 'no outstanding ornamental characteristics', being 'broadly pyramidal, but 'irregular' in shape, notably the habit of one or two of the main branches initially growing out almost horizontally for about 1 m before curving upwards to the vertical, while outer branches can be long and pendulous. Other authorities have been more generous, noting its straight trunk and relatively short and slender branches forming a small crown. The twigs are dark brown, strigose pubescent at first, becoming smooth. The alternate buds are ovoid, covered with a grey pubescence.
The upper leaf surface is finely furred becoming smooth, while the undersruface is covered in white fur. Flowering occurs between late summer and late winter. The yellow (occasionally red) flower spikes grow up to 200 mm (8 in) high by 70 mm (3 in) wide, the fruiting cones can remain on the trees for many years after shedding the flowers early. Its leathery leaves are between 70 mm (3 in) and 120 mm (5 in) long with fine teeth, subspecies remanens leaves have few if any teeth except at the tips of the leaves.
Leionema lachnaeoides is a tall shrub to high with white stems covered in fine, smooth, silver star-shaped hairs quickly becoming smooth. The leaves are more or less terete , long, wide, arranged alternately along the branches on a flattened petiole, with a slight upward curve and ending in a point. The leaf upper and lower side and edges are smooth, surface leathery, margins rolled under almost obscuring the paler underside. The flowers are borne singly on a short peduncle about long in upper leaf axils and covered in soft star-shaped hairs.

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